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Metromarxism

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"Metromarxism" discusses Marxism's relationship with the city from the 1850s to the present by way of biographical chapters on figures from the Marxist tradition, including Marx, Walter Benjamin, Guy Debord, and David Harvey. Each chapter combines interesting biographical anecdotes with an accessible analysis of each individual's contribution to an always-transforming Marxist theory of the city. He suggests that the interplay between the city as center of economic and social life and its potential for progressive change generated a major corpus of work. That work has been key in advancing progressive political and social transformations.

224 pages, Hardcover

First published August 16, 2002

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Andy Merrifield

23 books38 followers
Andy Merrifield, British author and professor.

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Andrea.
Author 8 books208 followers
April 16, 2014
‘Thinking about the city from the standpoint of a Marxist, and about Marxism from the standpoint of an urbanist, is fraught with a lot of difficulties’, says Merrifield, and he is right. Collected here, however, are all of the key figures who have attempted this in some form or other. A brilliant and engagingly-written introduction to Marxism and geography for a beginner, and a thought-provoking review for those well into it, with a chapter each on major thinkers. The only thing lacking in here is the ladies, their absence as critical thinkers apologized for by Merrifield and while I feel that I should be able to name a few that could have appeared off the top of my head I just can’t with the exception of possibly Doreen Massey. Maybe Gillian Hart. Not yet iconic perhaps. They are also all white. This raises some questions and concerns about both geography and Marxism, but I’ll leave those for now.

It begins with Marx of course, and a few insights I quite liked that don’t immediately have to do with property. The way that action on the external world changes us internally as well, subject and object both mediated by practice. This revolutionary practice thus involves changing people and ideas and ‘ideas about ideas’, to ‘educate the educator himself’ (18, Marx 422). There follows a review of the dialectic, always useful. It primary characteristic that of change, with Capital as a study of movement. The roots of this constant change lying in contradiction, ‘incompatible elements within an entity that both support and undermine that entity’ (25). And he nails what I like most about Marx:
Marx asked us—we of radical bent, that is—to grasp the dual character of the world, to see it singly in its duality, to envision it simultaneously as a process and a thing, as a social relation and an object, an observable outcome with an unobservable ‘law of motion’. (27)

Of course, as Merrifield notes, Marx wrote very little on the city itself, or even property. This was really the province of Engels.

What Engels described in studying the slums of Manchester is so familiar to me given my knowledge of today’s slums, it is hard to find insight in it. In itself an insight. I love that he understood how poverty is really an act of violence against those living in it, what he calls ‘social murder’ (49, quoting p 127). He stripped the acts of city redevelopment of their social justifications, understanding that slum clearance – so often claimed to be the solution then and now by business and liberal reformers – simply shifted the problems elsewhere. ‘As long as the capitalist mode of production continues to exist it is folly to hope for an isolated settlement of the housing question or of any other social question affecting the lot of the workers’ (46, Housing Q p 368).

I love Walter Benjamin, but my love for his work hasn’t helped me much in understanding the way that academics have tried to use it theoretically. I found this useful in the ways that Benjamin thought about the commodity and opens up the experience of the arcades, the spectacle of this aspect of the city, the crowds and the lights and the beautiful objects, as a commodity for further theorising. And this, on his relationship to Brecht and Marxism:
Thus, dialectical crudity and utmost theoretical subtlety would split Benjamin’s Parisian exposes: He’d proceed to mix the dignity of the library with wisecracks of the street, intellectual high life with everyday lowlife, rhapsodic verse with ribald curses. At its best, Benjamin’s Marxism of the city would get ‘the mediation’ about right, would give a new depth of experience to metropolitan Marxism, taking the dialectics of both to a new height, with a new richness, adding dream to the negotiation of the commodity form. Benjamin was the first Marxist to appreciate the capitalist city as a profane illumination, as revolutionary within the revolution, as a veritable city of light. With open wings and head turned backward, the angel Walter can help us understand the pile of debris that accompanies the storm of progress (68).

Henri Lefebvre is another theorist I love and struggle with, definitely someone requiring hard work to pluck the nuggets from the meanderings. I like Merrifield’s take on him, for example his thoughts on the everyday:
Everyday life, instead, possessed a dialectical and ambiguous nature. On the one hand, it’s the realm increasingly colonized by the commodity, and hence shrouded in all kinds of mystification, fetishism, and alienation….On the other hand, paradoxically, everyday life is likewise a primal site for meaningful social resistance, ‘the inevitable starting point for the realization of the possible’ (79).

Thoughts on contestation:
contestation was absolutely crucial; it helped ‘link economic factors (including economic demands) with politics’ (L 65). Contestation names names, points fingers, merges institutions and men, makes abstractions real, and is one way ‘subjects’ express themselves, ceasing to be ‘objects’. Contestation means a ‘refusal to be integrated’ (L67); it is ‘born from negation and has a negative character; it is essentially radical.’ It ‘brings to light its hidden origins; and it surges from the depths to the political summits, which it also illuminates in rejecting them’. Contestation rejects passivity and fosters participation. It arises out of a latent institutional crisis, transforming it into ‘an open crisis which challenges hierarchies, centers of power’ (L68, 87).

Lefebvre also began this theorization of the connections between real estate and capital, the way that surplus value could be generated through real estate investment and built environment, the investments in fixed capital that constitute a secondary circuit alongside that of production. In The Production of Space he began to examine how this secondary circuit worked, how space itself became ‘colonized and commodified, bought and sold, created and torn down…’ Back, as Merrifield argues, to Marx’s obsession with returning to the roots of things, to the process, to production. ‘The shift from theorizing ‘things in space’ to the ‘production of space’…mimicked Marx’s shuft from ‘things in exchange’ to ‘social relations of production’ (89).

Debord follows, situationist and a student of Lefebvre. Merrifield quotes Lefebvre on Debord, forgive my nerdiness but I love that. On the practice of derive (drifting through a city, psychogeography, etc) Lefebvre writes that it is…
‘more of a practice than a theory. It revealed the growing fragmentation of the city. In the course of its history, the city was once a powerful organic unity; for some time, however, that unity was becoming undone, was fragmenting, and the Situationists were recording examples of what we had all been talking about….We had a vision of a city that was more and more fragmented without its organic unity being completely shattered. (97)

Thus the ‘unitary city’ of the situationists, a battle against the fragmentation caused by planning and efficiency and market-driven development. A ‘disruptive and playful’ movement to reunite, bring together. This reconstruction of place is:
predicated upon spatial (geographical) appropriation: it reconstructs the urban environment ‘in accordance with the power of the Workers’ Councils, of the anti-statist dictatorship of the proletariat’ (Thesis 179). This reconstruction would necessitate a ‘sense of place,’ a sense of what the place was, is, and what it might be. To detourn an urban context—to reappropriate it in other words—one needs to know what it possessed and what it lacked; one needs to know that place, that neighbourhood, that city (such was the point of ‘psychogeography,’ after all); and one needs to be able to straddle the dialectic between its particularity and its generality. (105)

I find that stuff more exciting than the society of the spectacle – as indeed it embraces the idea of the spectacle and how it is employed through urban form.

Castells! I read City and the Grassroots and was blown away, this helped me resituate it, regard it more critically. I’ve also read The Urban Question, but long ago, it is something I need to read again. I do remember his critique of Lefebvre for lack of rigor. But also for looking at how his theory of the urban revolution obscures the class revolution, as the motor is no longer worker exploitation but alienation. Castells argued for urban relations as an expression of social relations, not the source. Initially taking on Althusser’s ideas of complexity structured in dominance – which I find particularly persuasive and useful myself – and argued against Lefebvre
while the city threatened capitalism, it somehow had become more functional for capitalism. Indeed, the city, Castells writes, had become the ‘spatial specificity of the processes of reproduction of labor-power and of the processes of reproduction of the means of production’ (C443, 119)

Thus the state involves itself in regulating the urban in a way conducive to capital through planning. But Castells moves away from Althusser, Merrifield labels The Urban Question as perhaps too formalist, while City and the Grassroots is too skewed towards practice and too removed from structure. I loved that about it myself, starting where the people are is standard in my own tradition of popular education, so I’m not sure how I would judge it now that I am more fluent in theory and a believer in its value. At the time of this writing Castells had all but left the Marxist fold, but hearing him speak to Occupy at St Pauls I’m not sure if he isn’t back.

Of course David Harvey has a chapter. I’ve read much more of him than anyone else, and much more recently as well. I agree with the prodding to read his Limits of Capital, as it’s impossible to do justice to that kind of work in a single chapter. I always imagined he wrote it to work through a full Marxist theory of rent only hinted at in earlier works, and I was right. I also appreciated the distinction between his work and early Castells:
Havery’s Marxist theory, like Lefebvre’s, thereby accredits a much more offensive role for the city and for space under capitalism. Space and urbanism don’t just help reproduce labor-power, as Castells believed, in a relatively defensive manner: the very spatial dynamics of urban land and property markets, to say nothing about ‘fixed capital’ infrastructure…actually boost the accumulation of capital. Urban space under capitalism is an ‘active moment’, proactively productive and not merely passively reproductive; it is, Harvey argues, a unit of capital accumulation as well as a site of class struggle (142).

There is as well a review of his engagement with postmodernism, taking from it new understandings of race and gender and identity without relinquishing Marx.

The final chapter is on Marshall Berman, he is the only theorist I have not read at all and I am now regretting that immensely. A return to the more creative, descriptive, literary theorization. Words thrown around like urbicide, the murder of the city. He was there during Moses’s bulldozing of swathes of NY and there is no better term for it. But I love that he seems to have thought about what happens after. The good that can come from it, the ways that people deal with it. Merrifield calls it a ‘Marxism of affirmation’ (170), and interestingly puts this into opposition with the work of Mike Davis. I think he is far too dismissive of Davis who I don’t think theorizes quite the ‘Marxism of closure’ or ‘urbanism evacuated of agency’ (171) that is stated here, but it is undoubtedly focused on the structures of power and its destructive force. I am looking forward to reading Berman, see if he manages to describe a city without doing that. It Is hard in this day and age I believe.
Profile Image for Bülent Bilgili.
69 reviews5 followers
July 18, 2025
Seçilmiş "maître penseur"ler üzerinden şehir olgusuna Marksist bakışın kitabı, insanı daha önce öyle değilse bile aristokrasi sempatizanı yapabilir.

Dünyayı düşünmeyi bilenler yönetmeli --zaten politikacıların arkasında öyle bir ekip yok ise.

💭
Profile Image for Julia.
26 reviews19 followers
June 29, 2013
Merrifield's book is everything I could possibly want in an introductory text; he has essentially created crib notes for those who are interested in Marxian urban theory. Knowing very little of human/urban geography, I found this to contain a measured yet compelling approach to the field. Having now read this, I have a better understanding of key texts, such as Lefebvre's The Production of Space and Harvey's Social Justice and the City. An added bonus: my comprehension of the breadth and depth Marx's original texts has improved! I also appreciate how Merrifield weaves together the works of various theorists, demonstrating commonalities that might get overlooked in more singular studies.
Profile Image for Titus Hjelm.
Author 18 books100 followers
November 15, 2013
Simply great. Andy Merrifield pulls off making a potentially dry overview of Marxist urban theory into a fascinating tale of the city. Loved it. Although somewhat dated now, the most important figures are covered here. Only Merrifield himself is missing!
Profile Image for Ietrio.
6,946 reviews24 followers
April 29, 2020
A minor governmental bureaucrat professing his belief in Marxist dogma, writing some sort of hagiography. The text is mediocre at best, offering phrasing like "Guy Debord was almost exactly thirty years Henry Lefebvre's junior" Almost. Exactly.
6 reviews2 followers
December 5, 2008

well-written primer on theorists of spatial politics
Profile Image for Ivan Labayne.
383 reviews22 followers
July 20, 2020
From here: https://ivanemilabayne.wordpress.com/...

Andy Merrifield’s Metromarxism, a book answering to a theory itch after two books of fiction. After the chapters on Marx and Engels and Benjamin, the fourth one is devoted to Lefebvre and at the part I am currently reading, Lefebvre’s making a connection between the dominance of the Cartesian logic in early 20th century urbanism (rigid planning, lifeless “functional spaces”) and cities becoming boring, typifying “enclosed and finished” worlds. To illustrate his points, he compared Cartesian, dull and predictable Mourenx to his childhood town, Navarrenx, where “Nothing can happen in the street without it being noticed from inside the houses, and to sit watching at the window is a legitimate pleasure… The street is something integrated.”

*Meanwhile, in ‘affluent’ and ‘developed’ cities like early 20th century Parisian Mourenx, 21st century New York Tokyo, Singapore or Manila, a bitter irony engulfs boredom, inviting the brooding ones: “A magnificent life is waiting just around the corner, and far, far away.” Sure, there are endless ways to battle boredom, ceaseless consumerist options to have a (fake? fleeting?) good time, yun lang, they do not come cheap. You might be standing just outside a cake shop, just around the corner, but if you do not have hundred-peso bills, the promise of sweetness is nonetheless far away.
Profile Image for Graham.
86 reviews22 followers
December 21, 2007
This is a decent survey of urban geography from a Marxist perspective that holds the urban environment with great potential if freed from the oppression of the capitalist system. If you see the urban environment as harmful no matter what the economic system may be, then this book is not for you. Some of these views are actually rather old-fashioned now that we have a better understanding of how we are destroying our environment. That being said, if we must live in cities, I suppose this is the way to do it.
Profile Image for Sarah.
167 reviews11 followers
December 8, 2009
I think I'm just steadily losing my ability to read academic books. There was nothing wrong with this overview of various Marxist thinkers and their theories of the city; I just couldn't stay interested, especially when my requested copy of Columbine became available at the library. So I stopped halfway through the Henri Lefebvre chapter.

I do think this is a readable and clear overview of these thinkers (at least as far into it as I read), and would be good for students. Just maybe not for pleasure reading.
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